NASA Press Release
August 24, 1999
Experimental X-34 Rocket Plane to Begin Extensive Testing
NASA's experimental X-34 rocket plane will undergo testing in New Mexico, California
and Florida under a test plan recently approved by Agency officials. Both schedule
and cost implications are currently being evaluated.
To support the expanded flight test program, engineers from NASA's Dryden Flight
Research Center, Edwards, CA, and Orbital Sciences Corporation, Dulles, VA, will
upgrade the first airframe, designated A-1A, for flight. Following a series of tow
tests on the ground at Dryden, the A-1A will be used to conduct unpowered test flights
from Orbital's L-1011 carrier aircraft at the Army's White Sands Missile Range, NM.
At the same time, Orbital, NASA's contractor for X-34, will complete assembly
of the second X-34, designated A-2. Its Fastrac rocket engine will be installed on
the vehicle and test fired on the ground at Holloman Air Force Base, NM, test facilities.
After these ground test firings, the first series of powered flight tests of the
X-34 will take place at Dryden.
The A-2 vehicle then will be shipped to NASA's Kennedy Space Center, FL, for
a second series of flight tests. These flights, which will reach speeds of up to
approximately Mach 4.5, will demonstrate rapid turnaround flight operations. Demonstrations
of autonomous crosswind landings and flight through rain will also be part of this
testing.
Dryden and Orbital will complete the remainder of the test program, which involves
the third X-34, designated A-3. These test flights will expand the rocketplane's
maximum capability of speeds up to Mach 8 and altitudes up to 250,000 feet, while
also testing additional reusable launch vehicle technologies as carry-on experiments.
The unpiloted, reusable X-34 is designed to demonstrate technologies and operations
necessary to cut the cost of putting payloads into orbit from $10,000 to $1,000 per
pound. Orbital has an $85.7 million contract with NASA to design, build and test
fly three X-34 vehicles.
The winged, single-engine X-34 is 58.3 feet long. It has a 27.7-foot wingspan
and stands 11.5 feet tall. It will be powered by a reusable Fastrac engine, designed
and developed by Marshall engineers and built by NASA's industry partners.
The X-34 is designed to be air-launched from beneath Orbital's modified L-1011
carrier plane and make an automated landing on a conventional runway and be readied
for its next flight.